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About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (May 18, 1900)
Commercial and Financial Happening of Interest In the Growing Western State. Price Bounty for Seal Scalp. Chairman Kendall, of the fisheries committee of the Astoria Progressive Commercial Association, is circulating & petition among the canners and those most directly interested for subscrip tions for a fund to be used in paying a bounty of $1 each for seal scalps and $2.50 each for sea lion scalps. The fund is to be placed in the nan Is of the secretary of the association and war rants drawn against it by the fish com missioner. This Bubscription list is the result of an effort being made by the association to exterminate one of the greatest enemies to the fishing in dustry. It is claimed that a sea lion will devour four salmon every 24 hours, and as there are at least 2,500 of these animals hovering about the mouth of the river, 10,000 fish or 4,000 cases, representing about $13,860, are being destroyed each day. The intention of the association is to have the law amended so as to set aside a portion of the license money for paying this bounty, but this cannot be done until the next session of the legislature, and in the meantime the funds are to be raised by subscription. 14 Tear for Highway Robbery. Mai tin Everett, an American citizen, was sentenced at Vernon, B. C, to 14 years' imprisonment for highway rob bery, alleged to have been committed about a year ago at Grand Forks, B. C. Six months ago the case was laid be fore United States Consul Dudley, and be presented it to the state department at Washington, D. C. The sentence caused great surprise, as it was known that the case had become an inter national matter. Consul Dudley to night apprised Secretary Hay of the sentence. His prior representations to the state department were favorable to Everett's contention that his arrest by Canadian officials at Republic, Wash., was unwarranted. ' i uriL umv t ur new uwra 1 I - Mother's Heroic Sacrifice to Save Her Small Son. l ne heroic impulse of Mrs. John Sommefroh In pushing her 6-year-old son away from her saved the boy's life it the expense of the mother's exist ence. She was 28 years old, the wife at a farmer living near Lyndhurst, L. L She was walking with her son to ward Babylon on the east-bound track Jf the Long Island Railroad. The train left Babylon at 4:25 in the afternoon, bound for Long Island City. aiotner and son were In no danger wnere tney were. They could see the , train three miles away, for the road I runs perfectly straight at that point The boy was walking at his mother's side and was next the west-bound track. The oncoming train was rush ing at high speed. That tremendous fascination which even grown people inmoHmnn 1 1 . . . . . I .va,vi,ureo irci wuen tney are looking it a swiftly approaching train a desire :o throw one's self in front of the loco notlve must have taken possession of :he child. j The boy gave a scream and darted icross the tracks. FTo nmni - . 1 - ..... . .1 I me oistriDution trane in snoes, but j second in the path of the train. His manufacturers are hanging back in another sprang after him. That one their purchases of leather, and hides second enabled her to catch up with are rather weaker. i him. It w m... ... She thrust the boy from her Inactive Demand and Weaker Are the Feature. Bradstreet's says: The trade situation this week may be summed up in the phrase, inactive demand and weaker prices. While in many respects the industrial situation is easier than it was, the unsettlement in the building trades continues marked, the reflex ac tion being exhibited in the unsettled demand for building material and weaker prices for lumber and for many produots used in the building industry. Iron and steel buyers are still hold ing off, most of the business done being for small lots for immediate consump tion. Relatively good reports come from the retail trade at most centers, not withstanding the backward spring, but as yet the volume of reorder business from wholesalers and jobbers has proved disappointing. Finished cotton and woolen goods remain steady. Wool is weaker, owing to the re stricted demand from manufacturers and in sympathy with lower prices set at many grades at the London wool sales. Relatively a good report comes from Relatively the best trade reports still come from the Pacific coast mar kets, but better weather conditions at the South have tended to brighten trade reports from that seotion. Wheat, including flour, shipments for the week aggregate 3,480,704 bush els, against 5,537,022 last week. Business failures in the United States for the week number 174, as compared with 153 last week. second. lust as the train struck her. Death ;ame to her Instantly. All had hap- coolness tn the social atmosphere, let him remove at once to one of those es tablishments whose landladies adver tise that they and the guests are all one family. In these the home feelings at times fairly run riot In the veins. They are no mere product of mustard plaste.-s and fiat-irons, but the result of a great, warm, miscellaneous In timacy on the part of the people who might otherwise have dodged one an other had they ever met at all. It Is an Intimacy ordained by chance, but it Is as thick as that of twins and as voluble end unescapable as the Inter course of a crate of chickens on their way to market. The social ties that lash souls to gether at a boarding-house table draw more powerfully than any mustard plaster and leave more lasting effects. Sometimes for good, but sometimes for evil, it must be said. They say a deli cate brain is apt to break down after ten years or so of boarding Just from the dripping on it of continued table talk. Like every other good thing, it can be overdone. HIGH LIVING. TELEGRAPH FRIENDS. People Who Know Each Other Wlthon Having Seen Each Other. "It's very funny," said a former "lightning Jerker" the other night, to New Orleans Times-Democrat man. 'what vivid pictures telegraph opera tors who have never met will form of each other merely from talking over PACIFIC COAST TRADE. Fatten Eastern Oysters. Mr. Wachsmuth expects another car load of Eastern oyster seed for his beds near Oysterville. With him the rais ing of Eastern oysters is no experiment, as he is the pioneer in the business on the North Pacific coast. He has had fully matured Eastern oysters to ship for two years past, and eaoh year has increased his importation of Eastern oyster seed. He has never succeeded in propagating them here, but depends entirely upon the growth of the oysters be plants for his profits. The demand greatly exceeds the supply. The Riverside Tennis Club has been organized in Arlington, Or. Gold dust is as much a medium of exchange at Sparta, Or., as it was 35 years ago. H. M. Stevens and W. F. Yeck, who are operating the Darnell mine, have made application to the city council for a franchise to operate an electric light plant in Kalama, Wash. An effort is on foot to organize a company of National Guard at Cottage Grove, Or. The required number of names have been secured and many more are available that conld be had. Dr. R. E. Stewart, of Goldendale. Wash., has a collection of over 30,000 perfect Indian arrow heads, besides nevoiai iuuubuuu impenect ones, ana a large and rare collection of Indian curios. The supply of milk at the Browns ville, Or., creamery is increasing. It now averages over 3,500 pounds per day, and still tnere are a few more who have not commenced supplying miiK yet, nut will do so later. Navigation on the Upper Columbia is to be a reality, it is 'said, even though the boats of the portage com pany fail to materialize. J. A. Pound has commenced work at Arlington on a boat that will be capable of stemming tne current oi tne big river at any stage of water. doz. Seattle Market. Onions, $9. Lettuce, hot house, 40 45c Potatoes, $16 17; $17 18. Beets, per sack, 50 60c. Turnips, per sack, 40 60c. Carrots, per sack, 7585c. Parsnips, per sack, 50 75c. Cauliflower, California 8590o. Strawberries $2.00per case. Celery 40 60c per doz. Cabbage, native and California, $1.001.25 per 100 pounds. Apples, $2.002.75; $3.003.50. Prunes, 60c per box. Butter Creamery, 22c; Eastern 22c; dairy, 1722c; ranch, 1517o pound.! Eggs 17c. Cheese 14 15c. Poultry 14c; dressed, 1415c; spring, $5. SAVED HE BOY JUST ASnE TAN One Needa a Balloon to Reach Prices In a Dawson Cafa. "V .. u suppose,- said a man who was in the Klondike last summer, "that with the improved facilities of travel ana weight transportation to the Klondike country prices of Jbbrn modi fies tnere would have become just a little more nearly normal, but I hw In my possession a bill of fare I got at xaeaiys notel and cafe In Dawson in September last, and here are some of me prices that one must pay for eat ables. The hotel in a ture chiefly logs, and the conveniences are not altogether modern, and a good many of them are lacking, but the rate per day Is twelve dollars. If one eats at the cafe a la carte here's what he pays: Sirloin steak and onions, $3' porterhouse plain, $3.50; with mush rooms, $4; tenderloin plain, $2.50; with musnrooms, $3.50; Chateau Brian! (spelled that way), $4; with onions, $3.50; Hamburg steak, $1.50; English mutton chop (one), $2; (two), $3.75; breaded, $2.75; corn beef hash, $1.50; lamb chops, plain, $2.50; pork chops! sauee piquant, $3.25; liver and bacon, $!.'; plain, $1.50; ham and eggs, $2.50; bacon and eggs, $2.50; fried tripe, $1.50; pigs' feet, $1.50; fried in batter, $2; kid ney, fried, broiled or saute, $1.50: with mushrooms, $1.75; pork sausage, $1.50; men eggs (two), $2; scrambled, poach ed or on toast, $2; with oysters, $2.50; plain omelet, $2; ham, oyster, jelly ome let, or with onions, $2.50; Spanish or rum omelet, $3; souflle, $3.50; Welsh rabbit, $2.50; golden buck, $3, and so on, with pie at a dollar a slice,' and pud ding a dollar a smell, and cigars 50 cents for the cheapest As I said, it does seem that at this late date living would become a little cheaper, but peo ple who have anything to sell want the earth for it, and the hapless con sumer must pay the price or go with out The only consolation is that II will be as bad or worse at Cape Nome, though that will probably tumble juicker because It is so much more ac :essible than the Klondike." SEAKCfl FOR A GIKL. AN INDIANA WOMAN'S LONG YEARS OF SEEKING 'Aunt Polly" Barnett Dead. After Seeking a Lost Daughter for Twenty Tears Touching Story of Old and Insane Wanderer Over the Earth. pened so suddenly that Mrs. Somme froh was a corpse before Engineer For- Deil could close the throttle and check the speed of the train. The train crew went back, to find the victim. Engineer tforbeil had told the others how the Hay Puget Sound timothy, $11.00 woman had given up her own life In an 12.00; choice Eastern Washington timothy, $18.00 19.00 Corn Whole, $23.00; cracked, $23; feed meal, $23. Barley Rolled or ground, per ton, $20. Flour Patent, per barrel, $3.25; blended straights, $3.00; California, $3.25; buckwheat flour, $6.00; gra ham, per barrel, $3.00; whole wheat flour, $3.00; rye flour, $3.804.00. effort to save the boy, and they won- i tiered If she had succeeded. When they found the woman's body the trainmen took off their caps and tears streamed down their faces as they lifted the remains to the side of the tfack, where they placed a guard over them. Not far away they found the child, unconscious, but alive. He was carried Into a car and placed on seat cusnions, wnile the tra n sneedwl tn Millstuffs Bran, per ton, $13.00; Long Island City, where an ambulance C. T. Moore, the Blaine, Wash., mill man, who platted the original townsite of Blaine for the Cain Bros., is making preparations for the building of a com plete sawmill and box factory on the Semiahmoo side of the Blaine harbor. Everything is arranged, and the mill will be placed in operation as soon as it can be constructed. Five well developed cases of small pox are reported at Forest Center, Stev ens county, Wash., three and one-half miles north of Springfield. Dr. Baker reports the cases are in three different families. It is said the members of the families have been around town as usual and many people have been ex posed. The county commissioners have been notified of the cases and a quar antine has been established on the three families. The Bellington Bay Rod and Gun Club has made arrangements to pro cure 20,000 rainbow trout fry for Lake Whatcom. This variety of trout is the shorts, per ton, $14.00. Feed Chopped feed, $19.00 per ton; middlings, per ton, $20; oil cake meal, per ton, $30.00. Fresh Meats Choice dressed bee' steers, price 8c; cows, 7c; mutton 8c; pork, 8c; trimmed, 9c; veal, & 10c. Hams Large, 18c; small, 18 H: breakfast bacon, 12c; dry salt sides. 8C was waiting. handsomest, gamest and best ot r.e tront family on the Pacific coast and the advantages of securing a plentiful supply of these fish are so great that the club intends to establish a nursery for them near the foot of the lake where the young fish can be brought to an age and size to care for themselves. An unknown man was killed at Marcus, Wash., while attempting to steal a ride on a freight train. His head was almost severed from the body. H. B. Moyer has temporarily closed his sawmill on the Calapoola. He has between 400,000 and 500,000" feet of lumber, which will shortly find its way to the valley, mostly to Browns ville. Mr. Moyer will soon move his mill below the old logging camp, where he expects to cut nearly 4,000,000 feel every year. Mrs. G. L. Circle has sent for the necessary machinery to start a cream ery at Prineville, Or. Gross Bros.' Iron Works are manu facturing a quartz crusher for A. E. Wood and F. L. Gilman. to be used ai eir IIllliCH 111 I.I1H n mn Tl vpr matrirr VH T.nn I' 1H7PT10 IT kOiMBta. 'I'Un uuu oi ooo nonnnfl. Ann la tnn mran. ion of Mr. Gilman, who claims that it m. wuan . w tuuD ui fjuaxiifi per (my. wo ore cars, to be operated by a cable, en. The motive power to operate tht achinery will be a waterwhaei. Portland Market. Wheat Walla Walla. 51 52c; Valley, 52c; Bluestem, 54c per bushel Flour Beat grades, $3.00; graham, f2. 50; superfine, $2.10 per barrel. Oats Choice white, 36c; choice gray, 33c per bushel. Barley Feed barley, $14 14.50; brewing, $16.0016.50 per ton. Millstuffs Bran, $13 per ton: mid dlings, $19; shorts, $15; chop, $14 per ton. Hay Timothy, $9 11; clover, $7 T.50; Oregon wild hay, $6 7 per ton Butter Fancy creamery, 80 35c; seconds, 45o; dairy, 25 80c; store, 2225c. Eggs 13c per dozen. ineese Oregon full cream, 13c; Young America, 14c; new cheese 10c per pound. Poultry Chickens, mixed, $4.00 4.50 per dozen; hens. $5.00: sm-inps. $2.503.50; geese, $6.508.00 for old; $4.506.50; ducks, $6.007.00 per uuaeii; turKeys, live, 14 6515c Der pouna. Potatoes 40 65c per sack: sweets. aJ?4C per pound. Vegetables Beets, $1; turnips, 75c; per sack; garlic, 7c per pound; cab bage, l6o per pound; parsnips, 75; onions, 3c per pound; carrots, 50c. Hops 2 8c per pound wool Valley, 12 13c per pound; eastern Oregon, 10 15c; mohair, 27 80c per pound. Mutton Gross, best sheep, wethers and ewes, 3ic; dressed mutton, 7 7J4C per pound; lambs, 6c. Hogs Gross, choice heavy, $5.00; light and feeders, $4.50; dressed, DEEDS AWAY HIS DAUGHTER. She la Given as a Sort of Chromo with Fifteen Mining Claims. Miss Ida Davis, youngest daughter of Josian w. P. Davis, of Redding, Cal., a pretty girl, with dark eyes and hair has been deeded to Rudolph Ott as if sbe were a piece of real estate. The girl is thrown in as a sort of chromo along with fifteen mining claims, and In rlg IM HAVI.1.J default of Davis being able to deliver hese and the chromo to Ott he agrees to forfeit $10,000. The two men princi pals in the strange transaction seem to take it as a plain, serious matter of business. How the girl views it is not known. She is silent If sne isn't a strictly obedient daughter it will cost her father $10,000. the line. As a general thing they are correct for you can size up a man pretty accurately from the way he manipulates the key, but sometimes they are ludicrously wide of the mark. "When I was a kid and was holding down my first job in a little Ohio town, I worked on a Pittsburg wire with an operator who signed C. D. He was a jolly fellow, and slack times we used to chat and chaff and spin yarns to each other by the hour. He was a cap ital story teller and a still better lis tener, and there was an appreciative quality in his 'h a,' 'h a,' 'h a,' Jhat was peculiarly tickling to my vanity. You know, that's the wav teleirrnnhara laugh over the wire, by sounding h a auu repeat, ana tbere's lust m mnxh difference in the way It is done, as there is in laughing with your mouth. wen, i got quite attached to C! TV and Imagined I knew exactly how he looked. I thought he was about 20. with a round Jovial face, and a Httl baseball mustache. A eood dresser I said to myself, and popular among the giriB, ana i was niied with such a yearning to make his acquaintance that I finally seized on a very flimsy pretext to run over to Pittsburg for a couple of days on ostensible private business, but really to meet C. D. face to face. I was only 17 and was sure we would have a glorious time together. When I walked into the office, a thin elderly man, with a long gray beard, was lean ing against the counter. 'Is Mr. aDouir said l. giving C. D.'s right name. I am Mr. ,' he replied, and you could have knocked me over with a feather. "When he heard who I was he turned red and made some excuse to get away. Poor old chap, he had enjoyed playing boy, and we were equally disconcerted. I never joked with O. D. any more." Hard Shoes In Service. It is said that each war brings out t oemand for quite a crop of chiropod ists, or corn doctors. This is due to the poor quality of shoes soldiers generally wear. Most of these shoes are furnish ed by some contractor, who cares little for the comfort his goods give, and they are stitr and poorly shaped, thus caus ing much suffering among the troops. People who are experienced in such matters say that going barefoot for r day is preferable to wearing the hard unwieldy shoes that are given the men wnen on the march. NaDoieon. whn was a great general in little things as wen as big, never neglected the details pertaining to his men's dress, and he always tried to get them comfortable shoes. Statistics show that a larger percentage of shoemakers are enlisted among soldiers than from any othet trade, but they usually have to fight in stead of cobble. The regimental corn doctor is one of the most popular army institutions. Negro Distrust of the Javbir I. Southern negroes regard the jaybird with comically grave distrust, says the Chicago Times-Herald. To them he Is tne counsellor, guide and friend of tht evil one himself. The amount of con fidences established ages ago between tne devil and the jaybird is to the Af rican mind enormous. Plantation "un cles" and 'aunties" believe that when ever Satan can spare the time from his frying operations he visits earth, and ne ana tne layDlrd hold a council ol war, devising ways and means Wherein and whereby to ensnare the darkv soul Before this combination the voodoo charm of red flannel, fish-bones, scrap ings of human nails, and hair from a aeaa person is of no avail. The rab bit 8 foot is powerless. The only de- rense is "rassiln' " in prayer. This is highly esteemed, as the more arduous tne "rassiln' " the less work will be done in the field next day. The Jay Dira is safe from negro attack safe through fear. "Aunt Polly" Barnett, whose long search for her daughter made her known all over the southern part of Indiana, is dead. A week before her death she was taken into the home of a kind woman at Linton, Green County, and there she died. The citizens of Linton, long acquainted with her and her story, subscribed for the funeral expenses and a large number of people were at the Methodist church when the Rev. William Buck conducted the services. Her maiden name was Lay and she was born in Kentucky at least sixty years ago. She was first married to a man named Sexton, and after his death she was married to a man named Bar nett She had one child, a daughter, by her marriage with Sexton, and it was this girl's disappearance that made her an insane wanderer. John Bays, who was prosecuting attorney of Green County at the time the girl disappeared, relates the story as follows: "The daughter left the house one morning twenty years ago and had not returned by evening. The next day a search for her was begun and the moth er continued it until she was unequal to rurtber tramping about the country m my investigation i soon made up my mind that the daughter had been put out of the way by some person or persons to escape exposure at her hands. I finally concluded that thrse persons knew something about her dis appearance. I also reached a conclu sion tnat she was drowned in White River and that her body was anchored at the bottom of the river. We found footprints in the sand along the shore in a secluded spot and there portions of her clothing were found. While I was entirely convinced of these facts I could get no evidence on which to proceed against the suspected persons. I followed the career of the three men and each met with a tragic death." Accompanied by her younger daugh ter, a child of Barnett the mother be gan her search. She walked up and down the banks of the river and of oth er streams In the same part of the State. After several years she aban doned the river and streams and began looking into the faces of women in the towns and villages of Southern Indi ana. She visited cemeteries and read again and again the Inscriptions on tombstones. Undertakers' shoos were visited by her regularly. The daughter who accompanied her, always walking just behind her, grew Into womanhood. They were seen In all kinds of weather. They slept in hovels, in strawstacks, or unaer trees. They ate what was eiven to tbem, and no housewife in Southern Indiana ever turned them away with out food or clothing. '.'Aunt Polllv's" search awakened sympathy every where. A few years ago the daughter flied from consumption. She was buried in a country cemetery, but a year or so ago her mother became dissatisfied with her resting place arid exhumed the body and carried the bones elsewhere but where no one has ever known. Af ter her daughter's death she was ac companied by a large black cat which, she requested before her death, should be turned loose and be allowed to con tinue the search. A collar was made for the cat with "Aunt Polly's" name and the date of her death engraved on it. lne cat left Linton a few davs afterward. Wednesday, yet the average "med" Is a regular attendant Up and down he parades, blowing bis trumpet in the face of everyone he meets and looking the very picture of happiness, although past the age of three. By 7 o'clock the "tarry rope" lamps are lit and the fun commences. Coun try "bumklns" fetch their "lasses" and buy them candy and pears or whatever Is wished for; provided that the cost does not exceed sixpence. The elite of both sexes mix with the crowd and "treat" the one the other. When all Is about sold out the students start for home with a rush, upsetting the stalls as they go. Nothing, of course, is said by the police, it being "Timmer" day. Should any one be so absent-minded as to forget the months and the days thereof he has no doubt whatever, from the head-splitting noise, of the last Wednesday in August BELOW THE BOILERS. $5. 00 6. 50 per 100 pounds. Beef Gross, top steers, $4.004.50; cows, $S.504.00; dressed beef, 6 7740 per pound. Veal Large, 6K7Kc; small, 8 BXac per pound. Tallow 55c; No. 2 and grease, o Xt (s 4c per pound . LIFE IN A BOARDING HOUSE. Ban Francisco Market. Wool Spring Nevada, 14 16o per pouna; Eastern Oregon, 12 16c; "Val ley, 2022c; Northern, 1012c. nops loan crop, ntgiao per pound. Butter Fancy creamery 1717Kc; do seconds, 1616c; fancy dairy, loc; do seconds, 14 15c per pound. Eggs Store, 15c; fancy ranch, 17c. Millstuffs Middlings, $17.00 20.00; bran, $12.50 18.50. Hay Wheat $6.509.50; wheat and oat $6.009.00; best barley $5.00 7.00; alfalfa, $5.006.50 per ton; straw, 25 40c per bale. Potatoes Early Rose, 60 65c; Ore gon Burbanks, 70c$1.00; river Bur banks, 40 75c; Salinas Burbanks, 80c1.10 per sack. Citrus Fruit Oranges, Valenoia, $2.753.25; Mexican limes, $4.00 5.00; California lemons 75c$1.60; do choice $1.75 3. 00 per box. Tropical Fruits Bananas, $1.50 2.50 per bunch; pineapples, nom inal; Persian dates, 66jc per pound. Ten Years of the Table Talk Likely to UUK Insanity. A recent writer on women's occupa tions accounts for the permanence of the boarding house as a social Institu tion by a reference to this powerful Impulse of the human breast: "In a boarding house," says she, "you can obtain a mustard plaster and a cud of palatable gruel and a warm Iron for urniug a Biwi uui or a velvet gown. All these things are dear to a boarder." They create "a home feeling which the hungry heart of the hotel dweller misses." This is true, but It is not whole truth. and it Is unfair to the boarder, says the New York Commercial-Advertiser. Deservedly prized as are the mustard piaster and the warm Iron, they are not the only, or even the main, things that give the boarder that homelike low. It Is the conversation of the boarding bouse table that holds him and thrills him and keeps bis feelings A Woman's Wit. Gen. Hazen, the first head of the weather bureau in Washington, found it almost Impossible to persuade the members of Congress to vote for him the necessary funds with which to car ry out his plans. One spring, when the appropriation had ben shamefully cut down by the economy loving chairman of the committee, Mrs. Hazen was the guest at an after-dinner reception at the house of one of the Cabinet mem bers, where the most detestable and un endurable weather, untimely and un- iooked for, was the topic of the "mo ment. As Mrs. Hazen crossed the rrvim to make her adieus she was waylaid by the chairman of the offending commit tee, who accosted her thus: "Well, Mrs. Hazen, is this the best your hus band can do for us in the way of weath er?" Mrs. Hazen looked at him with a sudden flash in her eyes, then an swered, clearly and sweetly: "Yes, Mr. Blank, the very best for the appropria tion." The discomfited man fled, In the midst of the hardly concealed smiles of the surrounding guests. New Eng land Magazine. The Czar's Costly Yachts. xne emperor of Russia, who, In the foiar htar, which cost over 1,000,000 sterling, and the Standart which cost about haK as much, possesses finer yacnts than any other European mon arch. Four hundred thonsnnd nnnnda was spent on the principal apartments on the main deck of the Polar Star. The decoration of the dining-room cost 20, 000. The decks are very curious, being paved with red, black, and white mar ble, and the.-e is a marble fountain. The big dining-room below decks will seat 200 persons. All the annrtmpnta are fitted with rare stones and wood. The crew and stewards number 400 men. Tne yacht Standart Is a splendid vessel, somewhat on the lines of the Paris and other steamshiDs that mn between Southampton and New York. tier accommodation below Is saoerb there being suites of cabins for eleven members of the Royal family. Serves His Purpose. A boy's code of eitquette does not con form witn the manual most mnn and adopted In so-called polite society, says the Memphis Scimitar, but it serves his purpose all right Two chubby little fellows were stroll ing along the sidewalks the other after noon, when they were joined by a third, who was a stranger to one of the two chums, so the other proceeded to intro duce tbem. "'Ned' Bright do yon know Tom' Brown?" he questioned. "Nope," replied "Ned." "Well, Tom' Brown, do yon know 'Ned' Bright?" "Nope," returned "Tom." "Well, now you know each other." young and homelike. One should not 8,0 wea and om Proceeded to t.i . v. cav-ii uiua in tne most ap- I proved manner and roll over and over in the dust In the friendly wav hnv have. KVEnuuK lue spiritual siae. xever a meal without its cheerful greeting and kindly weather talk. Not even if he would, could he be left out of those genial discussions beginning with- See by the paper we're going to have snow." T - nu one ever reels neglected In a boarding house. No one ever has any hungry-hearted botol Ionesomeness about Ulm there. If ie detects any Lawsuit Over lOO Yean Old. A lawsuit which has lasted more than 100 years has recently been settled Ireland. In 1870, Robert Smyth, brew: er, or smock alley, Dublin, failed. dividend was paid, but that was not sufficient to realize S4.80 in the Dound It has now been discovered that a small sum Invested at the time by the court as being too trifling for distribution has, by the accumulation of compound Interest in a hundred odd years, devel- opea into rour figures, enough to pay off all the debts and leave a good sum for law costs. Strange to say, there Is i claimant for every penny due In 1790. Hlsft Price for Butterflies. High prices are pa:d for butterflies. and some private collections, such as tnat of the Hon. W. Rothschild at Trlng, Herts, England, are said to be worth 100,000 more or less. Some New Guinea butterflies have fetched 50 apiecM. One of the Rothschilds is said to have paid 200 for a Papilio, now quite common. The demand for rare specimens has led to dishonesty. The insects are dyed or else wings from one species are fastened to the bodies of other species. & shrewd person never makes the mistake of putting oleomargarine be fore a woman guest from the country. How superior a boy feels when he hears some other boy being scolded) Prairie Dos Towns In Nebraska. Within a radius of four miles of Rush ville, Neb., there are no fewer than nine prairie dog "towns," covering at much as 3.500 acres of pasture, wbic U rendered "almost useless. rhe Mighty Powers of Propulsion of transatlantic Liners. Twenty-five years ago the Engineer. of London, the recognized authority on all matters pertaining to steamship navigation, made the prediction that the crossing of the Atlantic ocean, by a steamship, at the speed of twenty five miles an hour, was one of the things impossible of accomplishment. iuai uiue me Atlantic nad never been crossed by a screw steamer at as high a speed as fifteen miles an hour; the Cunarder Scotia, the last of th3 ble sidewheelers, never doing better than an average of fourteen and a half knots. Therefore the prophecy of the Engineer was not at all a wild one. But to-day there are steamers that have reached the speed of twenty-five miles an hour. and others are in course of construc tion which are expected to surpass it. The fastest liner of to-day has done more than an average of twenty-five miles. Her enormous engines and now- erful propellers, mignty powers of pro pulsion, have forced her through the roughest waters of the Atlantic at an average speed of twenty-one knots, which is a fraction over twenty-six miles In the hour. The distance of the Southampton New York route Is 3,060 miles, which covers on the average in five days and seventeen hours, considerably over twenty-flve miles an hour for the en tire trip; her mighty engines that throbbing, thumping heart down below revolve about eighty times per min ute, or about 672,000 revolutions to cross the Atlantic. Frank Leslie's Pop ular Monthly. The Timmer Market. On the last Wednesday of August every year there is a fair called the "Timmer Market" held in the Castle Square In Aberdeen, Scotland. Some fifty or sixty years ago nothing could be bought at it but wooden articles from which arose the name "Timmer." Now, however, it Is the Scotch house wife's last chance of getting her ber ries for preserving. Every patron of the market knows that after that month the only chance of fruit is gone hence the rush. Great and small, rich and poor alike turn out Booths, set to the best advantage and numbering perhaps two hundred, are arranged In rows, ample room being left for the buyers and pleasure-seek ers between. Fruit stalls, old clothes dealers, shooting ranges, wheels of for tuneeverything to make a penny can be found there. Schools and colleges have no recognised holiday on that Lord Charles Beresford Is noted for h's readiness at answering questions. His skill had a pretty good test durinz the recent election in York. There, when at the various meetings, the mob put him through his facings in good shape. Some one asked, "What distance is Khartoum from Soudan?" "That question," he remarked, "apparently comes from one of my countrymen. I will do as ihey do in Ireland and an swer it by asking another, 'What dis tance Is Dublin from Ireland?' " An interesting story Is told of how Mrs. Patrick Campbell, the well-known English actress, first went on the stage. About six years ago her husband ac cepted an oppolntment for seven years In a distant part of the world, and there were reasons why she could not accom pany him. In his absence Mrs. Camp bell suffeied much from ennui and lonel.ne s. F.nally, in her anxiety to find occupation and change, she aDnlied for and obtained an engagement with a touring company, which started her off on what proved to be her successful career. The Marquis of Waterford once show ed remarkable detective skill. A rob ber, who had broken into the Marquis' house at Curraghmore, Ireland, was pursued by him, and followed to a pub lic house four miles off. There the rob ber had seated himself amone a num ber of men, who were drinking and smoking, and not one of them would betray him. The Marquis, however. was master of the situation. He insist ed upon feeling all their hearts, and as he was their landlord, and the great man of the county, not one dared refuse. The man whose heart was still beating much too quickly was the robber, who had Just ceased runn'ng. When Senato;--eleet "Joe" Blackburn was practicing law in Kentucky a young fellow came into his otflce and expressed a longing to get work. Mr. Blackburn handed him a writ and told him to go to a certain house and serve the paper on the tenant "Now, don't come back and say you couldn't find him," he cautioned. "Nail it to the door if you have to, but serve it." The eager young man started out and returned an hour later with his face covered with bruises, and his clothes torn Into shreds. "Well," said Mr. Blackburn, did you serve it?" "No, sir," replied the battered employe; "the tenant licked me and told me to bring the papr back to you." Blackburn arose fr. m his chair, and towering up with indignation said: "Here, suh, take that writ back and serve it on that tenant suh, acd tell him, for me, suh, that by h avens, suh, he can't intimidate me through you, suh." Since Lord Beauchamp, the present British Governor of New South Wales, has occupied the government house at Sydney, he has ordained that an official receptions only guests of a certain rank shall be permitted to approach the presence through designated doors. To these blue tickets are awarded; to oth ers of inferior mold, white. At a re- c nt function, through some misman agement an Important public man re ceived a blue card, while a white one was sent to his wife. When the pair reached th audience chamber the lady declined to be separated from her hus band, or to abandon the aristocratic blue ranks. An ald-de-camp endeavored to reason with her, and explain the commot on that would ensue If blue and white were suffered to mingle to gether. But the fair one was equal to the occasion. "Nonsense," said she, as she pressed forward; "what do you take us for a seidlitz powder?" The aid collapsed. The fifth Duke of Devonshire and his brother. Lord George Cavendish, were noted for their taciturnity. Once, when traveling down to Yorkshire, they were shown into a three-bedded room. The curtains of one of the four-posters were drawn. Each brother in turn looked In and went to bed In another of the three beds. Toward the close of the next day's posting, one brother said to the other: "Did you see what was in the bed last n'ght?" "Yes, brother," was the reply. They had both seen a corpse. A Scottish paper tel s an anecdote in connection with the new electric sys tem Just opened In Aberdeen. Two farm servants came to Aberdeen to spend New Year's Day. Arriving by train, they immediately made their way to the terminus of the electric tiamway circuit where, after looking at the new creation with much wonder, they decided upon having a ride. Get ting on to the top of the car, and after getting well along: "Wull," said man Jock, "this Is a graun' Invention. In Edinburgh I saw them drive the cars wl' an iron rape anetb street In Dun dee they pu' them wl' an engine, but michty man, wha wad a' thocht they could ca' them wl' a fishing-rod!" Some men have so much respect for the truth that they always keep at a distance from It If a man is unable to say nothing and saw wood, ne can at least try to do either one or the other. Dignity always begins where boast-